Thursday, March 18, 2010

Bark Stupak tells us what it is like inside the pressure cooker as one of the few hold outs on ObamaCare.

“All the phones are unplugged at our house — tired of the obscene calls and threats. She won’t watch TV,” Stupak said during an hourlong interview with The Hill in his Rayburn office. “People saying they’re going to spit on you and all this. That’s just not fun.”

“How’s it been? Like a living hell,” Stupak said.

The only thing that would be worse for Stupak would be for him be the single vote that causes ObamaCare to crash and burn. If that were to happen he would probably have to move out of the country, because the purple shirt brigade would put a bulls eye on his back.

I have to give Stupak some credit for holding out this long. I am sure as we approach Bloody Sunday, the pressure will only intensify.

Bart Stupak, you're not in hell, yet. Part of your constituency is much more capable of providing that than the political party to belong to. You have to return home sometime, Bart, and face real people who function in the real world. You are walking in deep dukey as they say in the south.

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About Me

I am a black conservative from a black conservative family. I was born and raised in Brooklyn, New York and finally settled in New Jersey. Throughout my life I knew I did not share many of the common beliefs of other American blacks.
For starters, I never took to the term African-American. I have meet too many real Africans who are now Americans, to ever with a straight face say we share something in common other than skin tones. Their history and culture is truly a unique and is a completely different experience from my own. My culture is distinctly American, from the way I speak, think, dress and act and you know what else? I love it! So for me, I will always be an American who just happens to be black.
I put myself and my beliefs out here in cyberspace, to show my fellow blacks that there is something more. That one need not accept the false promise of the next social program, the belief in government as savior or the next Democratic candidate will right all wrongs. That true Hope and Change comes from belief in yourself, in a nation that allows dynamic movement if you are bold enough, smart enough and brave enough to make it happen.